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Report on Implementation, Use, and Sustainability of a Labor Epidural Service in Georgetown, Guyana.


Journal article


Sara L. Zettervall, A. Amata, J. Berger, Paul Dangerfield, R. Derkenne, Ramon Go, Deborah Jeon, K. Murphy, Molly Phillips, M. Sherman, K. Vaziri
The journal of education in perioperative medicine : JEPM, 2018

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APA   Click to copy
Zettervall, S. L., Amata, A., Berger, J., Dangerfield, P., Derkenne, R., Go, R., … Vaziri, K. (2018). Report on Implementation, Use, and Sustainability of a Labor Epidural Service in Georgetown, Guyana. The Journal of Education in Perioperative Medicine : JEPM.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Zettervall, Sara L., A. Amata, J. Berger, Paul Dangerfield, R. Derkenne, Ramon Go, Deborah Jeon, et al. “Report on Implementation, Use, and Sustainability of a Labor Epidural Service in Georgetown, Guyana.” The journal of education in perioperative medicine : JEPM (2018).


MLA   Click to copy
Zettervall, Sara L., et al. “Report on Implementation, Use, and Sustainability of a Labor Epidural Service in Georgetown, Guyana.” The Journal of Education in Perioperative Medicine : JEPM, 2018.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{sara2018a,
  title = {Report on Implementation, Use, and Sustainability of a Labor Epidural Service in Georgetown, Guyana.},
  year = {2018},
  journal = {The journal of education in perioperative medicine : JEPM},
  author = {Zettervall, Sara L. and Amata, A. and Berger, J. and Dangerfield, Paul and Derkenne, R. and Go, Ramon and Jeon, Deborah and Murphy, K. and Phillips, Molly and Sherman, M. and Vaziri, K.}
}

Abstract

Background The use of epidural analgesia for laboring women is generally unavailable at public hospitals in Guyana despite favorable utilization rates in private institutions. In 2014, a healthcare team completed a targeted mission aimed at neuraxial analgesia training of providers at the preeminent public hospital in Georgetown, Guyana. This study evaluates the impact of the training, including provider attitudes, use, and barriers.

Methods A prospective, mixed methods study of all obstetric, nursing, and anesthesiology providers at Georgetown Public Hospital Corporation was completed. Quantitative assessment of the posttraining use of epidural analgesia at 2 and 6 months was documented. Provider surveys were distributed anonymously at 2 months posttraining. Targeted interviews were completed from a random sampling of providers at 6 months; qualitative analysis of interviews formulated the basis for reporting limitations and barriers.

Results Providers surveyed included 7 anesthesia providers and 24 obstetrics providers. Respondents believed Guyanese women should be offered epidural analgesia (93%), epidurals could be performed safely (87%), and Guyana has the resources necessary for routine use (81%). In assessing epidural knowledge, anesthesia providers achieved 60% correct response rate compared to 84% among obstetrics providers. Nurse anesthetists placed 16 epidurals following training. However, placement ceased after 2 months. The largest barriers to placement were unavailable anesthesia staff (63%), lack of supplies (16%), and insufficient nursing staff to monitor patients with epidurals (11%).

Conclusions A 1-week mission achieved widespread Guyanese provider acceptance despite a lack of previous experience. However, barriers proved insurmountable to achieving a sustainable, independently functioning epidural analgesia program.